Posted on 07/14/2008 6:29:32 AM PDT by abb
Ron Fournier says he regards Sandy Johnson, his predecessor as head of The Associated Presss Washington bureau, as a mentor.
Johnson, though, regards Fournier, who replaced her in a hard-feelings shake-up in May, as a threat to one of the most influential institutions in American journalism.
I loved the Washington bureau, said Johnson, who left the AP after losing the prestigious position. I just hope he doesnt destroy it.
Theres more to her vinegary remark than just the aftertaste of a sour parting. Fournier is a main engine in a high-stakes experiment at the 162-year old wire to move from its signature neutral and detached tone to an aggressive, plain-spoken style of writing that Fournier often describes as cutting through the clutter.
In the stories the new boss is encouraging, first-person writing and emotive language are okay.
So is scrapping the stonefaced approach to journalism that accepts politicians statements at face value and offers equal treatment to all sides of an argument. Instead, reporters are encouraged to throw away the weasel words and call it like they see it when they think public officials have revealed themselves as phonies or flip-floppers.
The new approach was on display in a Liz Sidoti news analysis written earlier this month with the lead, John McCain calls himself an underdog. That may be an understatement.
Last week Beth Fouhys dispatch on her feelings about the end of Hillary Rodham Clinton's campaign began, I miss Hillary.
Executive Editor Kathleen Carroll said on Friday that she loved Fouhys column, and stressed that she saw it not as an opinion piece but as political analysis from a reporter who spent 18 months covering the Clinton campaign despite the fact that its written in the first person.
Fournier himself, shortly before taking the job as bureau chief, wrote several models for what hes called accountability journalism. A January lead declared that Obama is bordering on arrogance. A month later, he began a column with The Democratic nomination is now Barack Obama's to lose.
Fournier and other critics of the conventional press model, especially those on the left, have said that being released from the tired conventions of news writing is exactly what journalism needs.
By these lights, the mentality that presumes both sides of an argument are entitled to equal weight is what prevented the media from challenging the Bush administration more aggressively on the Iraq war and other issues.
Others warn that what Fournier and other proponents see as truth-telling can easily bleed into opinionizing exactly the opposite of the APs mission of delivering fast, unbiased news.
The problem, says James Taranto, the Wall Street Journals Best of the Web columnist and a frequent critic of what he sees as the APs liberal bias, is that while you can do opinion journalism and incorporate reporting into it, you cant say youre doing straight reporting, and then add opinion to that.
A dispatch Fournier filed in 2005 in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina began: The Iraqi insurgency is in its last throes. The economy is booming. Anybody who leaks a CIA agent's identity will be fired. Add another piece of White House rhetoric that doesn't match the public's view of reality: Help is on the way, Gulf Coast.
Fournier cited the article in an essay titled Accountability Journalism: Liberating reporters and the truth he wrote for the June 1 issue of the APs internal newsletter, The Essentials, as an example of how to be provocative without being partisan truth-tellers without being editorial writers.
The essay was preceded by an unsigned note declaring that It's AP's goal this year (and henceforth) to make this accountability journalism a consistent theme in our coverage of public affairs, politics and government. We have unmatched resources and expertise in every state to report whether government officials are doing the job for which they were elected and keeping the promises they make.
Katrina was a good example of when the journalism community got it right, because it was staring us in the face, Fournier, seated in the APs Washington bureau, told Politico.
When George Bush stood up there and said that things were going fine in Katrina, I was able to write, The president is wrong. That was pretty liberating. It was also a fact.
It seems to me theres a conscious effort to inject bias in the story, though obviously Fournier would see it differently, Taranto told Politico. Its a conscious move in the direction of advocacy journalism.
However its described, its clear Fourniers voice has drawn favorable treatment from the Drudge Report, which has linked to eight of his articles already this year, each in a standout format with his name in all caps and no mention of the AP as, for example, FOURNIER: She may pay high price for selfishness
At first blush, Fournier is an unlikely brand-name byline, let alone a proponent for a new brand of journalism. He joined the wires Little Rock bureau in 1989, moved to Washington with President Bill Clinton in 1993 and remained there though the 2004 election. For years, he was well known in Washington political circles if virtually unknown beyond as a classic AP reporter. He was smart, obsessed with being first on breaking news and wrote in the classic Joe Friday just the facts, maam style.
But over recent years, Fournier pushed up against his own boundaries. He left the AP in 2004 to take a Harvard Institute of Politics fellowship that he he said let him look at the journalism world from five miles off the ground, rather than five feet off the ground like you are as a wire reporter. He then co-wrote the book Applebees America and went to work as editor in chief of the political social networking startup Hotsoup.com, which went under in March 2007 when he returned to the AP as online political editor with a new and decidedly un-AP-like philosophy.
The only thing he ever managed is a startup that he ran into the ground, cracked Johnson when asked how her former protégé would handle overseeing the Washington bureau.
I think theres mixed feelings theres reluctance, said an AP staffer. The AP has always been a just-the-facts type of organization, the staffer added, where even star political reporters typically play a more behind-the-scenes role than those at other papers. And it was Johnson who hired the majority of reporters in Washington, meaning theyre now following not just a new leader but a new agenda.
While Johnson frequently clashed with APs New York headquarters, its clear Fournier has their support to continue the transformation of what Carroll described to Politico in January as not your fathers Oldsmobile.
We probably werent as boring as you thought we were, Carroll said when asked about the new style, adding that the AP has made enormous changes since she became editor in 2002. Dont make us decrepit or dull when were not.
Ron is a fully empowered acting bureau chief, and is doing a number of structural things, said Carroll, who added there is no asterisk next to his name, even though the move hasnt been made permanent.
Fourniers accountability journalism is at least in part a reaction to how the Web has reshaped the news business since the 2000 election, significantly reducing the barrier to entry for outside voices even as it has eroded newspapers advertising revenue, which in turn has meant staff and bureau cuts all of which have left the AP in an even more critical role as the last bureau standing, as it were.
It also makes the shift to more assertive reportage a risky one for the worlds oldest media organization, which relies on a base of subscribing news outlets from across the ideological spectrum that for decades have expected to receive clean, well-structured copy that addresses opposing views on equal terms and can easily be cut to length.
Until now, the AP has in effect served two roles: breaking news and serving as the last and definitive word. Outside editors who rely on the wire are excited about the change, but also concerned that Fourniers new brand of journalism could cut against both those traditional roles.
Craig Klugman, editor of the Ft. Wayne (Ind.) Journal Gazette, called Fournier a true heavy-hitter in this business, but said his newsroom has been split on the new format for AP stories, which some staffers consider innovative, while others dont believe its as cutting edge as the AP thinks it is.
The day he was interviewed, the paper was running a piece of the APs accountability journalism which seemed to Klugman a lot like enterprise journalism on the front page. The article, by Sharon Theimer, began with the Fournier-esque lead: Nuclear weapons? No way.
David Bailey, managing editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (where Fournier worked as a reporter in the 1980s), said that since the departure of former AP chief executive Louis Boccardi five years ago, hes noticed a new philosophy as the AP tries to do more with dazzle and footwork these days than [stories] with real substance, which is why he said its important the paper maintains an active wire desk to vet and edit the copy. We almost never run an AP story as we get it on the front of the paper, he said.
Still, he said, if the AP is smart enough to listen to what Ron will say, the AP will improve dramatically.
Washington bureaus are cutting back and newspapers in general are cutting back on their staffs, said Fournier, who warned that the result would be fewer really good investigative pieces that stick it to somebody who deserves it and fewer sharp, edgy analysis when somebody is breaking their promise, or when they are lying or spinning.
Since theres an opening in the marketplace for such reporting, he added, AP reporters have a responsibility not only as journalists and citizens, but also as business people seizing a market opportunity to keep the organization going.
Implicit in that argument is the idea that a Web-driven news environment has diminished the value of traditional commodity-style news.
The new approach, though, opens up the wire to the accusations of ideological bias often directed at other large outlets like the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal.
In a critique on Best of the Web of Fourniers Katrina coverage, Taranto argued that The AP's embrace of accountability journalism would seem to be a response to the proliferation of opinion, especially on the radio and online. You would think that given the glut of opinion, mainstream media organizations like the AP would emphasize what they are particularly good at, namely impartial reporting.
While editors still rely on the AP for Breaking News (the title of last years coffee-table book on the organization), Fournier prefers to move the conversation toward multimedia and muckraking journalism.
Theres a bigger need for this kind of journalism than ever, he said. The public is losing faith. Fournier rattled off a list of institutions, including organized religion, government, media, the military, big business and the courts, in which recent Pew polls show public confidence at all-time lows. Its our responsibility, he said, to step into that breach and say, Hey, what the hell is going on here?
In April, Fouhy wrote a 225-word dispatch from South Bend, Ind. that called out the Clinton campaign for an event in which the candidate, with the press in tow, rode with a commuter to a gas station to fill up. The lead: Hillary Rodham Clinton, a former first lady who hasnt driven a car or pumped gas in many years because of Secret Service restrictions, joined a blue-collar worker at a filling station Wednesday to illustrate how the high price of gasoline is squeezing consumers.
It was a totally camera-driven political stunt that was one for the record books, Fouhy said, adding that she was taking Rons philosophy in calling it as she sees it.
At times, Fournier has pulled back. He wanted to open a news analysis written by Fouhy and Nedra Pickler in May with, The Democratic presidential race is over. The lead itself would have been newsworthy coming from the wire that, under Johnsons direction during the 2000 presidential election, insisted Florida was too close to call even as the networks all called it incorrectly twice, as it turned out.
After some back and forth, the reporters won out with The Democratic presidential race is all but over.
Another AP staffer, though, said that while some top reporters may be able to stand up to the boss, others are less likely to do so.
Since becoming acting bureau chief, Fourniers written only one piece, but he intends to take on a more of a player-coach role, penning one or two pieces a week, and even occasionally hitting the campaign trail.
Even absent his byline, his influence has been evident, as it is in the lead to reporter Liz Sidotis June 19 news analysis on the Democratic nominees decision to reverse course on public financing: Barack Obama chose winning over his word.
In Fourniers view, the average reader is having a hard time figuring out the right from the wrong, the black from the white in politics, where gray often prevails.
But boy, when we can cut through the clutter, and we can say Barack Obama put politics over his word, which he did thats a fact, Fournier said. He did. He may not like the way Liz wrote it, but it is a statement of fact.
We have birthed the concept of Freedom of Speech.
We now witness its demise by those who have profited the most from its misuse of freedoms granted.
I continue to hold much hope for the internet and its ability to allow more than just Freedom of Speech - as we also have the unfettered Freedom of Thought with instant debate minus all the organizational entanglements and commitments.
Individuals are finally being given time and opportunity to see all segments of the global outreach and know our media for what they really are expecially when they purport to represent this nation and its people.
The AP has always been a just-the-facts type of organization, the staffer added, where even star political reporters typically play a more behind-the-scenes role than those at other papers.
But in reality the particular facts - and especially the rules by which the particular facts are selected for discussion - constitute a perspective. In the case of "if it bleeds, it leads," and "Man Bites Dog, not Dog Bites Man," the rules select for superficiality and therefore inherently subvert conservatism.
Al Pravda drops the mask...
You've hit upon a dictum our Saturday Morning Coffee Club espoused years ago: "What isn't in the news may be more important that what is in the news."
In other words, instead of faux objectivity, AP will now be blatantly obviously biased toward the left. I agree with you that this is ultimately a good thing. They're going to be biased anyway; they may as well wear it on their sleeves. |
Exactly! That’s the whole liberal mantra...people need to told what to think because they are so stupid. At this point, the AP should be what the web is NOT...a place where facts can be reported.
Fornier’s arrogence in telling us the truth is astounding but expected. My major was journalism in the 70s...believe me, the old professors would be taking this guy down!
http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticleHomePage&art_aid=86465
NBC: 2Q Profits Hold Steady, Zucker Puts Faith In Cable
by Wayne Friedman, Monday, Jul 14, 2008 7:30 AM ET
I haven’t clicked on a single AP story now for a couple of weeks.
I hope tens of thousands are following suit.
What will kill the AP - and it shouldn't be long now - is when it's subscribers (newspapers and local tv) realize they're throwing their money down a rathole.
"What isn't in the news may be more important that what is in the news."
. . . and what "isn't in the news" is not limited to the things that happened yesterday which didn't get reported. There is no necessary reason why what happened yesterday is more important than what happened last week - or for that matter 2000 years ago.The assumption that what happened 2000 years ago matters today is conservative. The assumption that what happened yesterday is important actually is radical.
A piece on the PT Barnum factor in the EBIDS (Electronic Broadcast Information Distribution System, often mistakenly called broadcast journalism or network news).
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/tv/la-et-comment14-2008jul14,0,7475850.story
Katie Couric, news anchors and the cult of personality
Ones of one is definitely following suit.
http://www.newsobserver.com/105/story/1140023.html
Published: Jul 13, 2008 12:00 AM
Modified: Jul 13, 2008 01:52 AM
Best critics keep all of us honest
By Craig D. Lindsey, Staff Writer
In case you haven’t heard, criticism is under attack. And so far, the body count among film critics is high.
Between 2006 and now, more than 30 film critics of all types all over the country have quit, retired, been laid off, accepted buyouts or been reassigned. With the myriad reports of print journalism going through an Internet-induced, ad revenue-depleted, downward spiral, critics of all forms of arts and leisure — movies, books, music, dance — have been among the first to get the ax.
So far this year, film critics have been exiting at an alarming rate. In March, veteran Newsweek critic David Ansen and New York Newsday critics Jan Stuart and Gene Seymour accepted buyouts, while the independent Village Voice’s Nathan Lee was laid off. In May, The Washington Post’s head critics, Stephen Hunter and Desson Thomson, accepted buyouts and left their positions.
snip
Until now, the AP has in effect served two roles: breaking news and serving as the last and definitive word.Michael Calderone, and by extension AP as a whole, clearly shows kook sign by claiming the last word.
It sounds like the screed of bloggers. The AP has chosen to “stoop” to the level of bloggers to maintain their relevance.
Unfortunately, they vote 90+% liberal, so we are in for much more liberal bias being displayed then even we ever expected.
May all their newspapers and such go bankrupt!
At least the bias will be out in the open now. Biased reporting, disguised as factual reporting, is more effective and insidious.
The assumption that what happened 2000 years ago matters today is conservative. The assumption that what happened yesterday is important actually is radical.
What ancient fact could be more important than today's sports and murders?
Reminds me of a great quote from Camus, of all people.
"A single sentence will suffice for modern man: he fornicated and read the papers."Al hit that one on the nose.--Camus
Buh bye, AP...
Actuially it’s losing money because it’s partisan.
http://www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/mixed-media/2008/07/14/cuts-at-the-journal-and-more-on-the-way
Cuts at the ‘Journal’ — and More on the Way?
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